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devoutchristian
Guest
We get it Thomas, you don’t discriminate, you just exclude people who marry non-Knanaya Catholics.
The Catholic Church has in the past tolerated all manner of things which we now know to be downright evil, such as slavery. Not knowing any better. Tolerance is not the same thing as approval.Ah and here is the underlying problem, all people who have not met Knanayas think the quote written above is our ideology. Please everyone who may read this thread,please understand The Knanaya Christians DO NOT discriminate against other Christians, we are for our traditions and customs, and an important custom being endogamy. Trust me there is not a single Knanaya who thinks we are above other Christans or other Christians are unworthy to celebrate in our churches. This is not the ideology of the Knanaya Church, we are just zealots for our faith and traditions, nothing more.
In all honesty do any of you think the Catholic Church would allow a diocese to grow and continue on racist ideals? And also please remember endogamy is a choice, no one is forcing this upon anyone. Once the individual is eligible for marriage he/she makes a personal decision whether to marry Knanaya or not to and if he chooses not to, there is no problem and no one is stopping him/her to do so. I myself have plenty of cousins and even siblings who married Non-Knanaya, even though they married out of the community I see them no differently, they are still my family and the lot of them still come to Knanaya Church though there membership is with the parish of their Non-Knanaya spouse.
Actually that would not be a correct example, because the Knanaya Catholics do not have their own sui juris (even though most people see it as one). We are members of the Syro Malabar Church, and in your example the Syro Malabar Church would be America and Kottayam Diocese would be one of her states. So what I am coming to is, that if a “citizen” of Kottayam Diocese marries outside of his “state” he does not loose membership to his entire “country” he is still and will always be if he chooses a member of the Syro Malabar Church.The Catholic Church has in the past tolerated all manner of things which we now know to be downright evil, such as slavery. Not knowing any better. Tolerance is not the same thing as approval.
And since you no longer accept those relatives of yours as members of your parish, you clearly DO now see them differently than you did previously.
It’s as if you came to America and were told ‘you can visit here as long as you want, but you can never ever hope to be a citizen’. Can you not see how this immediately puts you in a second class? It means you are forever denied important privileges such as the right to vote and stand for most government positions (and hence to participate in the running and leadership of your country). It means you won’t be protected as a citizen would be when abroad. It means you will not be eligible for some jobs and some social security benefits, things like that. It puts you forever on the back foot.
Similarly, to be denied membership of your parish means these poor people might well turn up every week, worship alongside you and donate every cent they can afford and every minute they can spare, but still be denied a voice in the community, a voice to which their contribution makes them every bit as entitled as you are.
Did Jesus ask any of His Apostles who their parents were? What race they were? what cultural practices they followed?
The difference between Knanaya parishes and Syro Malabar Parishes is a whole list of community traditions, especially those traditions of marriage. Endogamy is of course a major factor but there are many Knanaya Customs distinct from that of Syro Malabar customs.What is the difference between the Knanaya parishes and the other parishes in the Syro Malabar Church? Is it just the ethnicity of the members? If so, then I would say your refusal to allow non-Knanayas to be members would be racism. It would be equivalent to me telling you you can not be an Anabaptist because you are not German.
If someone is attending your church every week and adopting your beliefs then I would think they would be following the same traditions and customs as you, as least as far as religion is concerned. I fail to see how being born in a different culture than most of the members of a church should stop me from becoming a member of that church.
I am sorry but this makes no sense. If I become a citizen of the US that automatically means that I have the right to live exactly where I want, as long as I do not commit a crime or something equally morally reprehensible.Actually that would not be a correct example, because the Knanaya Catholics do not have their own sui juris (even though most people see it as one). We are members of the Syro Malabar Church, and in your example the Syro Malabar Church would be America and Kottayam Diocese would be one of her states. So what I am coming to is, that if a “citizen” of Kottayam Diocese marries outside of his “state” he does not loose membership to his entire “country” he is still and will always be if he chooses a member of the Syro Malabar Church.
Knanaya Catholics who marry outside the community know well for a fact that they will loose membership to their parish and their diocese, this they have been taught their entire life, they are not walking into this decision blindly. So these are not a group of “poor people” begging to regain membership. Also these Non-Knanayas will always have a say in the parish of there spouse and the entire Syro Malabar Church.
The policy in India is that those who marry Non-Knanaya loose their entire membership to their Knanaya Parish and Kottayam Archdiocese. The policy in America (this was a decision by the Vatican), Knanayas may have parishes just for Knanayas but those parishioners who marry Non-Knanaya will not loose membership to their Knanaya Parish but there Non-Knanaya spouses and children may never gain membership. After this decision was taken Metropolitan Mar Mathew Moolakattu said to those who marry Non-Knanaya “where you can take part in, take part, where you can’t, don’t”. He is basically saying to the Non-Knanayas, it is best for you and your family that you should choose to go to the parish of your Non-Knanaya spouse.
Also, I do not see my Non-Knanaya family members any differently, I would have no reason to. Remember The Knanaya Catholic Church, is in actuality a community with a Syro Malabar diocese respective to there traditions.
The difference between Knanaya parishes and Syro Malabar Parishes is a whole list of community traditions, especially those traditions of marriage. Endogamy is of course a major factor but there are many Knanaya Customs distinct from that of Syro Malabar customs.
Of course there are sometimes grave difficulties getting people of different cultures and customs to rub along. The solution is not segregation but education and continuing dialogue.Unfortunately this seems like a very complicated affair. At the most basic level, I personally believe that no parish should restrict membership based upon ethnicity to the extent that those associate with a different ethnicity are forced to leave. Usually, such principles are clear enough for me to make a judgement.
However, as much as they are part of the universal Catholic Church, this is an entirely different culture and place. As an Asian, I have seen first-hand how many disagreements arise from a misunderstanding about the other’s culture and customs, especially by those who have not been exposed to it, so I cannot rule out something similar occurring here. As such, I would like to caution against simply wading into this debate without any prior knowledge of the situation. I’m just to read up more about this and observe how this discussion develops.![]()
I hope you did not misunderstand my post. I am not advocating segregation. I am encouraging us to educate ourselves more about the culture of the Christians of South India and to keep in mind the possibility of cultural differences, so that we can engage in dialogue that has both meaning and understanding.Of course there are sometimes grave difficulties getting people of different cultures and customs to rub along. The solution is not segregation but education and continuing dialogue.
I’m just to read up more about this and observe how this discussion develops.![]()
And this is the reason exactly why Mar Mathew Moolakattu and the Knanaya Community tell the non-Knanayas and those who married out of the community, “where you can take part in, take part, where you cannot, don’t”. Basically that means go to a Syro Malabar Church or the church of your spouse where you are entitled to membership and other rights, It does not make sense for you to go to a Knanaya Church where you have no membership.It would be the height of illogicality for the US government to say to me ‘you can live and thus obtain rights to vote etc wherever you like in the US - except that you can never vote or hold office in Philadelphia even of you live there for the rest of your life there unless your parents were born there and you agree only ever to marry someone who was also born there’.
I don’t remember saying that I am always right, just that fact that these institutions were created for Knanaya Christians in respect to their customs and by this factor, these customs should not be revoked. Also Daffy I consider my self Syro Malabar but also a Knanaya of Kottayam Diocese but it seems that you have said many times you don’t consider Knanayas members of the Syro Malabar Church.Dear friends,
I replied to Thomas in my earlier posts but he argues that he is always right and pope and other establishment of church is wrong. He says he just prefer endogamy over other church practices.The answers and debates with him is followed up in this thread . Actually it was happened because he tried to post his newly established distinguishable customs in the name of Syro Malabar Christians where he don’t considers himself as Syro-malabarian.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=746837
Since it is reiterating to post the statements here, I am sharing the link here. Kindly go through it and justify yourself.
Regards and peace only with Jesus
Jo![]()
we maybe members of two diocese me Kottayam and you Thrissur but we are both Syro Malabar brethren right?
I don’t care if people want to only marry within their own people. That is their choice. Membership in a particular parish or diocese should not be based on ethnicity. It should be based on the Catholic Faith.
I Agree! Well said, too!I don’t care if people want to only marry within their own people. That is their choice. Membership in a particular parish or diocese should not be based on ethnicity. It should be based on the Catholic Faith.
Priests informed that the collections in churches have gone down drastically;
Somehow we need to stop demonstration;
We need to stop litigation because that will make the Syro Dioese Bankrupt.
VG requested our Bishops to write another letter saying that Bishop A’s letter is in fact Moolakatt formula– Bishops and priests did not agree to the idea
Meeting with Major Arch Bishop for a solution– VG said there is no need to go there initially. However other priests and bishops thought that is the best path.
Our Bishops asked VG to come to meet with the Major Arch Bishop. VG refused initially, however with the pressure from our Bishops and priests he finally agreed.
All the priests requested our Bishops to Include KCCNA representation in the delegation so that Knanaya Community is properly represented. VG reluctantly agreed to that as well but said “I will not call KCCNA president, one of you can.”
I wouldn’t fight to keep the ethinically impure from being members of my Catholic parish. You can marry who you want to marry. The Catholic Faith is One. If you adhere to the Catholic Faith, you may become a member in any of her parishes.I pray this meeting between Mar George Allencherry and the community goes well, or else it seems that KCCNA will sue the St.Thomas Syro Malabar diocese on the charge of misleading the community and other conditions. I hope this timeline of events has made it quite clear on how willing Knananites are to fight for their traditions.
Yes, of course.I wouldn’t fight to keep the ethinically impure from being members of my Catholic parish. You can marry who you want to marry. The Catholic Faith is One.
Except, of course, that unless one physically relocates, one does not exactly choose his/her parish. The law says it’s all by geography and, often times, not logical or proximate geography either. This applies to the Latin Church (where it does happen that a person may reside 100 feet from a church but is canonically ascribed to a different parish miles away), as much as it does to the Eastern/Oriental Churches, albeit that they’re far more spread-out. So, no, one really cannot pick to which parish one is ascribed.If you adhere to the Catholic Faith, you may become a member in any of her parishes.